3 SEVENTH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON E-LEARNING AND INNOVATIVE PEDAGOGIES SÉPTIMO CONGRESO INTERNACIONAL SOBRE E-LEARNING: APRENDIZAJE Y CIBERSOCIEDAD First published in 2014 in Champaign, Illinois, USA by Common Ground Publishing, LLC Common Ground Publishing All rights reserved. Apart from fair dealing for the purposes of study, research, criticism or review as permitted under the applicable copyright legislation, no part of this work may be reproduced by any process without written permission from the publisher. For permissions and other inquiries, please contact

6 1 e-learning Conference Dear Delegate, Welcome to the Seventh e-learning Conference. This conference investigates the uses of technologies in learning, including devices with sophisticated computing and networking capacities which are now pervasively part of our everyday lives. The conference explores the possibilities of new forms of learning, but in a wider range of places and times than was conventionally the case for education. e-learning, however does not necessarily spawn pedagogical innovation. Technology-mediated learning can be used to deliver content and assessment in ways that reproduce traditional transmission and memorization-based modes of learning. In this case, e-learning may have the virtue of being more efficient, whilst reinforcing traditional pedagogies. On the other hand, e-learning also opens up new opportunities for learning, new affordances which spawn innovative pedagogies. These fundamental questions are addressed by this conference and its companion journal. We are pleased to hold this year s conference in Forest Grove, Oregon, USA, at Pacific University just outside of Portland. The e- Learning Conference is proud to partner with Pacific University, and to continue the conversation of the meaning of contemporary learning and education. By way of background, this conference has evolved from e-learning Symposia held in Melbourne, Australia in 2006 and 2007, connected with the International Conference on Learning. Past conferences have been held in Chicago, Boston, Vancouver, Berkeley, Champaign, and Madrid. We hope you will be able to join us at next year s conference to be held 2-3 November 2014 at the University of California, Santa Cruz in Santa Cruz, California, USA. In addition to organizing this conference, Common Ground publishes papers from the e-learning Conference at Common Ground also organizes conferences and publishes journals in other areas of critical intellectual human concern, including diversity, learning, social sciences and technology, to name several. Our aim is to create new forms of knowledge community, where people meet in person and also remain connected virtually, making the most of the potentials for access using digital media. We are also committed to creating a more accessible, open and reliable peer review process. This is the longer story of the e-learning Conference. The shorter story is the phenomenal amount of work that has been done by our Common Ground colleagues in preparation for this conference. I especially would like to thank Rachael Arcario, Kim Kendall, Shelby Koehne, Raquel Jimenez Palomino, Ana Quintana, and Homer Stavely. In addition to our Common Ground colleagues this conference has had great support from our host University and we would also like to acknowledge the hard work done by Professor Al Weiss. We wish you all the best for this conference, and hope it will provide you every opportunity for dialogue with colleagues from around the corner and around the world. Yours Sincerely, Bill Cope Director, Common Ground Publishing Professor, Education Policy, Organization, and Leadership University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, USA

7 2 e-learning Conference ABOUT COMMON GROUND Our Mission Common Ground Publishing aims to enable all people to participate in creating collaborative knowledge and to share that knowledge with the greater world. Through our academic conferences, peer-reviewed journals and books, and innovative software, we build transformative knowledge communities and provide platforms for meaningful interactions across diverse media. Our Message Heritage knowledge systems are characterized by vertical separations of discipline, professional association, institution, and country. Common Ground identifies some of the pivotal ideas and challenges of our time and builds knowledge communities that cut horizontally across legacy knowledge structures. Sustainability, diversity, learning, the future of the humanities, the nature of interdisciplinarity, the place of the arts in society, technology s connections with knowledge, the changing role of the university these are deeply important questions of our time which require interdisciplinary thinking, global conversations, and cross-institutional intellectual collaborations. Common Ground is a meeting place for these conversations, shared spaces in which differences can meet and safely connect differences of perspective, experience, knowledge base, methodology, geographical or cultural origins, and institutional affiliation. We strive to create the places of intellectual interaction and imagination that our future deserves. Our Media Common Ground creates and supports knowledge communities through a number of mechanisms and media. Annual conferences are held around the world to connect the global (the international delegates) with the local (academics, practitioners, and community leaders from the host community). Conference sessions include as many ways of speaking as possible to encourage each and every participant to engage, interact, and contribute. The journals and book series offer fullyrefereed academic outlets for formalized knowledge, developed through innovative approaches to the processes of submission, peer review, and production. The knowledge community also maintains an online presence through presentations on our YouTube channel, monthly newsletters, as well as Facebook and Twitter feeds. And Common Ground s own software, Scholar, offers a path-breaking platform for online discussions and networking, as well as for creating, reviewing, and disseminating text and multi-media works. Common Ground España Since its inception, Common Ground Publishing has been committed to build bridges between different languages and cultures, crossing the geographical and linguistic boundaries that slow down the free flow of ideas between the countless communities that populate the planet. We are truly committed to diversity, and that is why we are striving to create synergies between the English, Spanish and Portuguese-speaking knowledge communities that meet every year at the conference, and that interact through the scholarly journals, the book series, and the social networks. To fulfil this ideal, Common Ground Publishing has launched Common Ground Publishing España in order to create and develop Latin American knowledge communities based on the Spanish and Portuguese languages and cultures, crossing geographic, linguistic and cultural borders. Each of these knowledge communities holds an annual academic conference (which takes place in parallel to Common Ground's conferences in English) and manages a peer reviewed scholarly journal, a book series and a number of social networks that allow scholars and practitioners to interact with other peers coming from different geographical, institutional and cultural origins, as well as to strengthen interdisciplinary discussions. For the time being, Common Ground Publishing España, which headquarters are located at the Research Park of the Universidad Autónoma de Madrid, has developed ten Latin American knowledge communities; Learning; E-Learning and Innovative Pedagogies; Science in Society; Interdisciplinary Social Sciences; On the Organization; New Directions in the Humanities; The Image; Book and Libraries; Health, Wellness and Society; and Technology, Knowledge and Society.

8 3 e-learning Conference THE E-LEARNING KNOWLEDGE COMMUNITY The e-learning knowledge community is dedicated to the concept of independent, peer-led groups of scholars, researchers, and practitioners working together to build bodies of academic knowledge related to topics of critical importance to society at large. Focusing on the intersection of academia and social impact, the e-learning knowledge community brings an interdisciplinary, international perspective to discussions of new developments in the field, including research, practice, policy, and teaching. Themes Theme 1: Pedagogies On the microdymamics of learning in and through digital technologies and social media. New learning supported by new technologies: challenges and successes Old learning using new technologies, for better or for worse Traditional (didactic, mimetic) and new (transformative, reflexive) pedagogies, with and without new technology Changing classroom discourse in the new media classroom Peer to peer learning: learners as teachers From hierarchical to lateral knowledge flows, teaching-learning relationships Supporting learner diversity Beyond traditional literacy: reading and writing in a multimodal communications environment Digital readings: discovery, navigation, discernment and critical literacy Metacognition, abstraction, and architectural thinking: new learning processes in new technological environments Formative and summative assessment: technologies in the service of heritage and new assessment practices Evaluating technologies in learning Shifting the balance of learning agency: how learners become more active participants in their own learning Recognizing learner differences and using them as a productive resource Collaborative learning, distributed cognition and collective intelligence Mixed modes of sociability: blending face to face, remote, synchronous and asynchronous learning New science, mathematics and technology teaching Technology in the service of the humanities and social sciences The arts and design in a techno-learning environment Theme 2: Institutions On the changing the institutional forms of education classroom, schools and learning communities in the context of ubiquitous computing. Blurring the boundaries of formal and informal learning Times and places: lifelong and lifewide learning Always ready learnability, just in time learning, and portable knowledge sources Educational architectures: changing the spaces and times Educational hierarchies: changing organizational structures Student-teacher relations and discourse Sources of knowledge authority: learning content, syllabi, standards Schools as knowledge producing communities Planning and delivering learning digitally Teachers as curriculum developers Teachers as participant researchers and professional reflective practice

9 4 e-learning Conference Theme 3: Technologies On new learning devices and software tools. Ubiquitous computing: devices, interfaces and educational uses Social networking technologies in the service of learning Digital writing tools; wikis, blogs, slide presentations, websites, and writing assistants Supporting multimodality: designing meanings which cross written, oral, visual, audio, spatial, and tactile modes Designing meanings in the new media: podcasts; digital video, and digital imaging Learning management systems Learning content and metadata standards Designed for learning: new devices and new applications Usability and participatory design: beyond technocentrism Learning to use and adapt new technologies Learning through new technologies Theme 4: Social Transformations On the social transformations of technologies, and their implications for learning. Learning technologies for work, civics and personal life Ubiquitous learning in the service of the knowledge society and knowledge economy Ubiquitous learning for the society of constant change Ubiquitous diversity in the service of diversity and constructive globalism Inclusive education addressing social differences: material (class, locale), corporeal (age, race, sex and sexuality, and physical and mental characteristics) and symbolic (culture, language, gender, family, affinity and persona) Changing the balance of agency for a participatory culture and deeper democracy From one to many, to many to many: changing the direction of knowledge flows Beyond the traditional literacy basics: new media and synaesthetic meaning-making Scope and Concerns First we called it computers in education. Then it was the World Wide Web. Then it was the reincarnation the Internet in the form Web 2.0 and social media. For a long time, we educators have lived with enthusiastic talk about the implications of technology in learning. Sometimes the talk has been plausible. At other times the results of using technology in learning have been disappointing. For all the hyperbole, education is in many sites and many ways still relatively unchanged the relations of teachers to students, students to each other and students to knowledge and this is the case even when technology is used. For instance, if the print textbook becomes an e-book, do the social relations of knowledge and learning actually change? If the pen-and-paper test is mechanized, does this change our assessment systems? Technology, in other words, can and often does reproduce and reinforce traditional, didactic relationships of learning. However, today s information and communications technologies also offer affordances which in many ways we have barely yet explored. These possibilities we call a new learning, and transformative pedagogy. How then, can we create and use technologies that push the boundaries of the learning experience, engage students more deeply and produce learning outcomes that live up to the high expectations of citizens, governments and workplaces in the twenty-first century? For this reason, in this knowledge community, we want to focus not just on e-learning, but the pedagogical innovations that we hope e-learning environments might support. In this agenda, the ideas and practices of ubiquitous learning suggest a wide range of possibilities. From Ubiquitous Computing to Ubiquitous Learning At first glance, it is the machines that make ubiquitous learning different from heritage classroom and book-oriented approaches to learning. These appearances, however, can deceive. Old learning can be done on new machines. Using new machines is not necessarily a sign that ubiquitous learning has arrived. Some features of ubiquitous learning are not new they have an at times proud and at times sorry place in the history of educational innovation, stretching back well before the current wave of machines. However, there is an obvious link between ubiquitous learning and ubiquitous computing. The term ubiquitous computing describes the pervasive presence of computers in our lives. Personal computers, laptops, tablets and smart phones have become an integral part of our learning, work and community lives, to the point where, if you don t have access to a computer networked with reasonable bandwidth you can be regarded as disadvantaged, located as a have not on the wrong side of the digital divide. Meanwhile, many other devices are becoming more computer-like (in fact, more and more of them they are computers or have computing power built in): televisions, global positioning systems, digital music players, personal digital

10 5 e-learning Conference assistants, cameras and game consoles, to name a few. These devices are everywhere. They are getting cheaper. They are becoming smaller and more portable. They are increasingly networked. This is why we find them in many places in our lives and at many times in our days. The pervasive presence of these machines is the most tangible and practical way in which computing has become ubiquitous. Importantly for education, the machines of ubiquitous computing can do many of the things that pens and pencils, textbooks and teacher-talk did for learners in an earlier era. They can do these things the same, and they can do them differently. Does ubiquitous computing lay the groundwork for ubiquitous learning? Does it require us to make a shift in our educational paradigms? It may, however, the approach of this knowledge community is more conditional than this. To reiterate, ubiquitous learning is a new educational paradigm made possible in part by the affordances of digital media. The qualifications in this statement are crucial. Made possible means that there is no directly deterministic relationship between technology and social change. Digital technologies arrive and almost immediately, old pedagogical practices of didactic teaching, content delivery for student ingestion and testing for the right answers are mapped onto them and called a learning management system. Something changes when this happens, but disappointingly, it does not amount to much. And another qualifier: affordance means you can do some things easily now, and you are more inclined to do these things than you were before simply because they are easier. You could do collaborative and inquiry learning in a traditional classroom and heritage institutional structures, but it wasn t easy. Computers make it easier. So, the new things that ubiquitous computing makes easier may not in themselves be completely new modes of communication, forms of social relationship or ways of learning. However, just because the new technology makes them easier to do, they become more obviously worth doing than they were in the past. Desirable social practices which were at times against the grain for their idealistic impracticality, become viable. The technology becomes an invitation to do things better, often in ways that some people have been saying for a long time they should be done. Following are just a few of the characteristic moves of ubiquitous learning that this knowledge community addresses in its various discussion forums. Participants may agree or disagree with these, or choose to add more. Move 1: To blur the traditional institutional, spatial and temporal boundaries of education. In the heritage educational institutions of our recent past, learners needed to be in the same place at the same time, doing the same subject and staying on the same page. The classroom was an information architecture, transmitting content, one to many: one textbook writer to how every many thousands of learners; one teacher to thirty something children or one lecturer to one hundred and something university students. The spatial and temporal simultaneity of this information and knowledge system practically made sense. Today, in the era of cheap recording and transmission of any textual, visual and audio content anywhere, such classrooms are less needed. Education can happen anywhere, anytime. Long traditions of distance education and correspondence schools mean that these ideas are far from novel. The only difference now is that ubiquitous computing renders anachronistic and needlessly expensive for many educational purposes the old information architecture of the classroom, along with its characteristic forms of discourse and social relationships to knowledge. Even the problem of duty of care for children is surmountable with mobile phones and global positioning devices. Knowing the location of a child in a classroom was never better than the one meter margin of error of GPS devices. And another problem with the old classroom: the idea was that this was preparation for life, enough to assume whatever one s lot would be, and the rest could be left to experience. Today, everything is changing so rapidly that today s education easily becomes tomorrow s irrelevance. So, there have been moves to make ongoing training and formally accredited education lifelong and lifewide. For people in work and with families, not able to commute to an institution or able to schedule their time easily, ubiquitous computing can be a conduit for education beyond the traditional spatial and institutional boundaries. Coming together in specific times and places will, of course, remain important, but what we will choose to do when we come together may be different from what happens in classrooms today these may be special times to focus, on face-to-face planning, collaborative work and community building. Then there s the new pervasiveness of pedagogy in spaces of informal and semi-formal learning help menus, intuitive interfaces, game-like staged learning, and over-the-shoulder-learning from friends and colleagues. This kind of learning only ever needs to be just in time and just enough. It is now integral to our lifeworlds, a survival skill in a world of constant change. Move 2: To shift the balance of agency. In the traditional classroom, the teacher and blackboard were at the front of the room. The learners sat in straight rows, listened, answered questions one at a time, or quietly read their textbooks and did their work in their exercise books. Lateral studentstudent communication was not practicable, or even desirable when it could be construed as cheating. Underlying this arrangement was a certain kind of discipline (listen to the teacher, read authority into the textbook), and a particular relationship to knowledge (here are the facts and theories you will need to know, the literature which will elevate and the history which will

11 6 e-learning Conference inspire). This kind of education made a certain kind of sense for a certain kind of world, a world where supervisors at work shouted orders or passed down memos in the apparent productive interests of the workers, where the news media told the one main story we were meant to hear, and where we all consumed identical mass-produced goods because engineers and entrepreneurs had decided what would be good for us. Authors wrote and the masses read; television companies produced and audiences watched; political leaders led and the masses followed; bosses bossed and the workers did as they were told. We lived in a world of command and compliance. Today, the balance of agency has shifted in many realms of our lives. Employers try to get workers to form self-managing teams, join the corporate culture and buy into the organization s vision and mission. Now the customer is always right and products and services need to be customized to meet their particular practical needs and aesthetic proclivities. In the new media, ubiquitous computing has brought about enormous transformations. There s no need to listen to the top forty when you can make your own playlist on your ipod. There s no need to take on authority the encyclopedia entry in Wikipedia when you, the reader, can talk back, or at least watch other people s arguments about the status of knowledge. There s no need to take the sports TV producer s camera angles when you can chose your own on interactive television. There s no need to watch what the broadcast media has dished up to you, when you can choose your own interest on YouTube, comment on what you re watching and, for that matter, make and upload your own TV. There s no need to relate vicariously to narratives when you can be a player in a video game. This new order applies equally well to learning. There is no need to be a passive recipient of transmitted knowledge when learners and teachers can be collaborative co-designers of knowledge. Instead, there are many sources of knowledge, sometimes problematically at variance with each other, and we have to navigate our way around this. There are many sites and modalities of knowledge, and we need to get out there into these to be able to make sense of things for ourselves. There may be widely accepted and thus authoritative bodies of knowledge to which we have to relate, but these are always uniquely applied to specific and local circumstances only we can do this, in our own place and at our own time. In this environment, teachers will be required to be more knowledgeable, not less. Their power will be in their expertise and not in their control or command routines. Move 3: To recognize learner differences and use them as a productive resource. Modern societies used to value uniformity: we all read the same handful of newspapers and watched the same television channels; we all consumed the same products; and if we were immigrant, or indigenous, or of an ethnic minority, we needed to assimilate so we could all comfortably march to the same national beat. And so it was in schools: everyone had to listen to the teacher at the same time, stay on same message on the same the page, and do the same test at the end to see whether they had learnt what the curriculum expected of them. Today there are hundreds of television channels, countless websites, infinite product variations to suit one s own style, and if you are immigrant or indigenous or a minority, your difference is an aspect of our newfound cosmopolitanism. This is all part of a profound shift in the balance of agency. Give people a chance to be themselves and you will find they are different in a myriad of ways: material (class, locale), corporeal (age, race, sex and sexuality, and physical and mental characteristics) and symbolic (culture, language, gender, family, affinity and persona). In sites of learning today, these differences are more visible and insistent than ever. And what do we do about them? Ubiquitous learning offers a number of possibilities. Not every learner has to be on the same page; they can be on different pages according to their needs. Every learner can connect the general and the authoritative with the specifics and particulars of their own life experiences and interests. Every learner can be a knowledge maker and a cultural creator, and in every moment of that making and creating they remake the world in the timbre of their own voice and in a way which connects with their experiences. Learners can also work in groups, as collaborative knowledge makers, where the strength of the group s knowledge arises from their ability to turn to productive use the complementarities that arise from their differences. In this context, teacher will need to be engaged members of cosmopolitan learning communities and co-designers, with learners, of their learning pathways. Move 4: To broaden the range and mix of representational modes. Ubiquitous computing records and transmits meanings multimodally the oral, the written, the visual and the audio. Unlike previous recording technologies, these representational modes are reduced to the same stuff in the manufacturing process, the stuff of zeros and ones. Also, like never before, there is next to no cost in production and transmission of this stuff. Now, anyone can be a film-maker, a writer who can reach any audience, an electronic music maker, a radio producer. Traditional educational institutions have not managed to keep up this proliferation of media. But, if educators have not yet made as much as they could of the easy affordances of the new media, the students often have. When educators do catch up, the learning seems more relevant, and powerful, and poignant. Educators will need to understand the various grammars of the multiple modes of meaning making that the digital has made possible, in the same depth as traditional alphabetic and symbolic forms.

12 7 e-learning Conference Move 5: To develop conceptualizing capacities. The world of ubiquitous computing is full of complex technical and social architectures that we need to be able to read in order to be a user or a player. There are the ersatz identifications in the form of file names and thumbnails, and the navigational architectures of menus and directories. There is the semantic tagging of home-made folksonomies, the formal taxonomies that define content domains, and the standards which are used to build websites, drive web feeds, define database fields and identify document content. These new media need a peculiar conceptualizing sensibility, sophisticated forms of pattern recognition and schematization. For these reasons (and for other, much older, good educational reasons as well), ubiquitous learning requires higher-order abstraction and metacognitive strategies. This is the only way to make one s way through what would otherwise be the impossibilities of information quantity. Teachers then need to become masterful users of these new meaning making tools, applying the metalanguage they and their learners need alike in order to understand their affordances. Move 6: To connect one s own thinking into the social mind of distributed cognition and collective intelligence. In the era of ubiquitous computing, you are not what you know already but what you can potentially know, the knowledge that is at hand because you have a device in hand. Even in the recent past, we had libraries on hand, or experts we could consult. Cognition has always been distributed and intelligence collective. The most remarkable technology of distributed cognition is language itself. However, today there is an immediacy, vastness and navigability of the knowledge that is on hand and accessible to the devices that have become more directly an extension of our minds. Those who used to remember telephone numbers will notice that something happens to their minds when the numbers they need are stored on the mobile phone the phone remembers for you. It becomes an indispensable extension of your mind. This should spell doom for the closed book exam. Educators will need to create new measures to evaluate learners capacities to know how to know in this new environment. Move 7: To build collaborative knowledge cultures. Ubiquitous computing invites forms of social reflexivity which can create communities of practice to support learning. In the ubiquitous learning context, teachers harness the enormous lateral energies of peer-to-peer knowledge making and the power of collective intelligence. This builds on the complementarity of learner differences experience, knowledge, ways of thinking and ways of seeing. Learners also involve people who would formerly have been regarded as outsiders or even out-of-bounds in the learning process: parents and other family members, critical friends or experts. Digital workspaces built upon social networking technologies are ideal places for this kind of work, at once simple and highly transparent when it comes to auditing differential contributions. Teachers need higher order skills to build learning communities that are genuinely inclusive, such that all learners reach their potential. Each of these moves explores and exploits the potentials of ubiquitous computing. None, however, is a pedagogical thought or social agenda that is new to the era of ubiquitous computing. The only difference today is that there is now no practical reason not to make any of these moves. The affordances are there, and if we can, perhaps we should. When we do, we may discover that a new educational paradigm begins to emerge. And as this paradigm emerges, we might also find educators take a leading role on technological innovation. The journey of ubiquitous learning is only just beginning. As we take that journey, we need to develop breakthrough practices and technologies that allow us to reconceive and rebuild the content, processes and human relationships of teaching and learning.

13 8 e-learning Conference Community Membership Annual membership to the e-learning community is included in your conference registration. As a community member, you have access to a broad range of tools and resources to use in your own work: electronic access to the full journal and book collections; a full Scholar account, offering an innovative online space for collaborative learning in your classes or for broader collaborative interaction with colleagues (within a research project or across the globe); and annual conferences where you can present your work and engage in extensive interactions with others with similar interests who also bring different perspectives. And you can contribute to the development and formalization of the ideas and works of others as a journal or book reviewer, as a conference participant, and as a contributor to the newsletters and community dialogue. Membership Benefits Personal electronic subscription to the complete journal for one year after the conference (all past and current issues). Personal electronic subscription to the book series for one year after the conference. One article submission per year for peer review and possible publication in any of the journals in the collection. Participation as a reviewer in the peer review process and the potential to be listed as an Associate Editor of the journal after reviewing three or more articles. Subscription to the monthly community newsletter, containing news and information for and from the knowledge community. Ability to add a video presentation to the community YouTube channel, whether or not it was presented in person at the conference or is published in the journal. Access to the Scholar "social knowledge" platform: free use of Scholar as your personal profile and publication portfolio page, as a place to interact with peers and forms communities that avoids the clutter and commercialism of other social media, with optional feeds to Facebook and Twitter. Use Scholar in your classes for class interactions in its Community space, multimodal student writing in its Creator space, and managing student peer review, assessment, and sharing of published students works in its Publisher space. Contact us to request Publisher permissions for Scholar. Engaging in the Community Present and Participate in the Conference You have already begun your engagement in the community by attending the conference, presenting your work, and interacting face-to-face with other members. We hope this experience provides a valuable source of feedback for your current work and the possible seeds for future individual and collaborative projects, as well as the start of a conversation with community colleagues that will continue well into the future. Publish Journal Articles or Books We encourage you to submit an article for review and possible publication in Ubiquitous Learning: An International Journal. In this way, you may share the finished outcome of your presentation with other participants and members of the e-learning community. As a member of the community, you will also be invited to review others work and contribute to the development of the community knowledge base as an Associate Editor. As part of your active membership in the community, you also have online access to the complete works (current and previous volumes) of Ubiquitous Learning: An International Journal and to the book series. We also invite you to consider submitting a proposal for the book series. Engage through Social Media There are several methods for ongoing communication and networking with community colleagues: Newsletters: Published monthly, these contain information on the conference and publishing, along with news of interest to the community. Contribute news or links with a subject line Newsletter Suggestion to Scholar: Common Ground s path-breaking platform that connects academic peers from around the world in a space that is modulated for serious discourse and the presentation of knowledge works. To learn more about Scholar, refer to the back of the program. Facebook: Comment on current news, view photos from the conference, and take advantage of special benefits for community members at: Twitter: Follow the YouTube Channel: View online presentations or contribute your own at See instructions at

15 10 e-learning Conference COMMON GROUND AND THE UBIQUITOUS LEARNING JOURNAL AND e-learning AND INNOVATIVE PEDAGOGIES BOOK SERIES About Our Publishing Approach For three decades, Common Ground Publishing has been committed to creating meeting places for people and ideas. With 24 knowledge communities, Common Ground s vision is to provide platforms that bring together individuals of varied geographical, institutional, and cultural origins in spaces where renowned academic minds and public thought leaders can connect across fields of study. Each knowledge community organizes an annual academic conference and is associated with a peer-reviewed journal (or journal collection), a book imprint, and a social media space centered on Common Ground s pathbreaking social knowledge space, Scholar. Through its publishing practices, Common Ground aims to foster the highest standards in intellectual excellence. We are highly critical of the serious deficiencies in today s academic journal system, including the legacy structures and exclusive networks that restrict the visibility of emerging scholars and researchers in developing countries, as well as the unsustainable costs and inefficiencies associated with traditional commercial publishing. In order to combat these shortcomings, Common Ground has developed an innovative publishing model. Each of Common Ground s knowledge communities organizes an annual academic conference. The registration fee that conference participants pay in order to attend or present at these conferences enables them to submit an article to the associated journal at no additional cost. Scholars who cannot attend the conference in-person may still participate virtually and submit to the journal by obtaining a community membership, which also allows them to upload a video presentation to the community s YouTube channel. By using a portion of the conference registration and membership fees to underwrite the costs associated with producing and marketing the journals, Common Ground is able to keep subscription prices low, thus guaranteeing greater access to our content. All conference participants and community members are also granted a one-year complimentary electronic subscription to the journal associated with their knowledge community. This subscription provides access to both the current and past volumes of the journal. Moreover, each article that we publish is available for a $5 download fee to nonsubscribers, and authors have the choice of publishing their paper open access to reach the widest possible audience and ensure the broadest access possible. Common Ground s rigorous peer review process also seeks to address some of the biases inherent in traditional academic publishing models. Our pool of reviewers draws on authors who have recently submitted to the journal, as well as volunteer reviewers whose CVs and academic experience have been evaluated by Common Ground s editorial team. Reviewers are assigned to articles based on their academic interests and expertise. By enlisting volunteers and other prospective authors as peer reviewers, Common Ground avoids the drawbacks of relying on a single editor s professional network, which can often create a small group of gatekeepers who get to decide who and what gets published. Instead, Common Ground harnesses the enthusiasm of its conference delegates and prospective journal authors to assess submissions using a criterion-referenced evaluation system that is at once more democratic and more intellectually rigorous than other models. Common Ground also recognizes the important work of peer reviewers by acknowledging them as Associate Editors of the volumes to which they contribute. For over ten years, Common Ground has been building web-based publishing and social knowledge software where people can work closely to collaborate, create knowledge, and learn. The third and most recent iteration of this project is the innovative social knowledge environment, Scholar. Through the creation of this software, Common Ground has sought to tackle what it sees as changing technological, economic, distributional, geographic, interdisciplinary and social relations to knowledge. For more information about this change and what it means for academic publishing, refer to The Future of the Academic Journal, edited by Bill Cope and Angus Phillips (Elsevier 2009). We hope that you will join us in creating dialogues between different perspectives, experiences, knowledge bases, and methodologies through interactions at the conference, conversations online, and as fully realized, peer-reviewed journal articles and books.

16 11 e-learning Conference The Ubiquitous Learning Journal Ubiquitous Learning: An International Journal ISSN: (print) Journal Editor Bill Cope University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, USA Mary Kalantzis University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, USA Publication Frequency Articles are published online first with full citations as soon as they are ready. Ubiquitous Learning: An International Journal contains four issues per volume. Indexing The Ubiquitous Learning Journal is indexed by: Ulrich s Periodical Directory Cabell s Directories Australian Research Council Acceptance Rate 22% Circulation 147,103 Foundation Year 2009 INTERNATIONAL AWARD FOR EXCELLENCE The Ubiquitous Learning Journal presents an annual International Award for Excellence for new research or thinking in the area of e-learning and Innovative Pedagogies. All articles submitted for publication in the Ubiquitous Learning Journal are entered into consideration for this award. The review committee for the award is selected from the International Advisory Board for the journal and the annual e-learning and Innovative Pedagogies Conference. The committee selects the winning article from the ten highest-ranked articles emerging from the review process and according to the selection criteria outlined in the reviewer guidelines. The remaining nine top papers will be featured on our website Award Winners Claudia Maria Zea Restrepo, Universidad EAFIT, Colombia Juan Guillermo Lalinde Pulido, Universidad EAFIT, Colombia Roberto Aguas Nuñez, Universidad EAFIT, Colombia Gloria Patricia Toro Perez, Universidad EAFIT, Colombia Camilo Vieira Mejia, Universidad EAFIT, Colombia For the Article Tag: Introduction to a Ubiquitous Learning Model to Assess the Ubiquity Level in Higher Education Institutions Abstract TAG, in Spanish: Tecnología, Aprendizaje y Gestión (Technology, Learning and Management) is a ubiquitous learning model that aims to be a point of reference for higher education institutions in their transformation processes for educational innovation. The model is based on three dimensions: Technology, Learning and Management, which are assessed through the identification of characteristics and properties in which metrics and indicators will be applied in order to determine the ubiquity level in a higher education institution, enabling the possibility to establish the organizational diagnosis and design strategies that could take them to a higher ubiquity index. The purpose of this paper is to present the conceptual referents that define the main properties for each of the dimensions of the TAG model.

17 12 e-learning Conference SUBMISSION PROCESS Every conference delegate with an accepted proposal is eligible and invited to submit an article to Ubiquitous Learning: An International Journal. Full articles can be submitted using Common Ground s online conference and article management system CGPublisher. Below please find step-by-step instructions on the submission process. 1. Submit a presentation proposal to the conference (in-person or virtual). 2. Once your conference proposal or paper abstract has been accepted, you may submit your article to the journal by clicking add a paper from your proposal/abstract page. You may upload your article anytime between the first and the final submission deadlines, which can be found on the next page. 3. Once your article is received, it is verified against template and submission requirements. Your identity and contact details are then removed, and the article is matched to two appropriate reviewers and sent for review. You can view the status of your article at any time by logging into your CGPublisher account at 4. When reviewer reports are uploaded, you will be notified by and provided with a link to view the reports (after the reviewers identities have been removed). 5. If your article has been accepted, you will be asked to accept the Publishing Agreement and submit a final copy of your article. If your paper is accepted with revisions, you will be asked to submit a change note with your final submission, explaining how you revised your article in light of the reviewers comments. If your article is rejected, you may resubmit it once, with a detailed change note, for review by new reviewers. 6. Accepted articles will be typeset and the proofs will be sent to you for approval before publication. 7. Individual articles may be published online first with a full citation. Full issues follow at regular, quarterly intervals. All issues are published 4 times per volume (except the annual review, which is published once per volume). 8. Registered conference participants will be given online access to the journal from the time of registration until one year after the conference end date. Individual articles are available for purchase from the journal s bookstore. Authors and peer reviewers may order hard copies of full issues at a discounted rate. SUBMISSION TIMELINE You may submit your final article for publication to the journal at any time. The final two deadlines of Volume 7 are as follows: 1. July 30, October 30, 2014 Note: Please feel free to submit at any time. If you already have an accepted proposal, you may submit your final paper for publication to the journal at any time throughout the year. However, the sooner you submit, the sooner your paper will begin the peer review process. Also, because we publish "web first," early submission means that your paper will be published online as soon as it is ready, even if that is before the full issue is published. Papers received after the Round 3 Submission deadline may be included in the subsequent volume For more information, please visit:

18 13 e-learning Conference JOURNAL SUBSCRIPTIONS, OPEN ACCESS, ADDITIONAL SERVICES Institutional Subscriptions Common Ground offers print and electronic subscriptions to all of its journals. Subscriptions are available to the journal and to custom suites based on a given institution s unique content needs. Subscription prices are based on a tiered scale that corresponds to the full-time enrollment (FTE) of the subscribing institution. You may use the Library Recommendation form in the back of this pamphlet to recommend that your institution subscribe to Ubiquitous Learning: An International Journal. Personal Subscriptions As part of their conference registration, all conference participants (both virtual and in-person) have a one-year online subscription to the Ubiquitous Learning journal. This complimentary personal subscription grants access to both the current volume of the journal as well as the entire backlist. The period of complimentary access begins at the time of registration and ends one year after the close of the conference. After that time, delegates may purchase a personal subscription. To view articles, go to Select the Login option and provide a CGPublisher username and password. Then, select an article and download the PDF. For lost or forgotten login details, select forgot your login to request a new password. For more information, please visit or contact us at Hybrid Open Access The Ubiquitous Learning Journal is Hybrid Open Access. Hybrid Open Access is an option increasingly offered by both university presses and well-known commercial publishers. Hybrid Open Access means that some articles are available only to subscribers, while others are made available at no charge to anyone searching the web. Authors pay an additional fee for the open access option. They may do this because open access is a requirement of their research funding agency. Or they may do it so that non-subscribers can access their article for free. Common Ground s open access charge is $250 per article, a reasonable price compared to our hybrid open access competitors and purely open access journals that are resourced with an author publication fee. Electronic papers are normally only available through individual or institutional subscriptions or for purchase at $5 per article. However, if you choose to make your article Open Access, this means that anyone on the web may download it for free. There are still considerable benefits for paying subscribers, because they can access all articles in the journal, from both current and past volumes, without any restrictions. But making your paper available at no charge increases its visibility, accessibility, potential readership, and citation counts. Open access articles also generate higher citation counts. For more information or to make your article Open Access, please contact us at Institutional Open Access Common Ground is proud to announce an exciting new model of scholarly publishing called Institutional Open Access. Institutional Open Access allows faculty and graduate students to submit articles to Common Ground journals for unrestricted open access publication. These articles will be freely and publicly available to the whole world through our hybrid open access infrastructure. With Institutional Open Access, instead of the author paying a per-article open access fee, institutions pay a set annual fee that entitles their students and faculty to publish a given number of open access articles each year. The rights to the articles remain with the subscribing institution. Both the author and the institution can also share the final typeset version of the article in any place they wish, including institutional repositories, personal websites, and privately or publicly accessible course materials. We support the highest Sherpa/Romeo access level Green. For more information on Institutional Open access or to put us in touch with your department head or funding body, please contact us at

19 14 e-learning Conference Editing Services Common Ground offers editing services for authors who would like to have their work professionally copyedited. These services are available to all scholarly authors, whether or not they plan to submit their edited article to a Common Ground journal. Authors may request editing services prior to the initial submission of their article or after the review process. In some cases, reviewers may recommend that an article be edited as a condition of publication. The services offered below can help authors during the revision stage, before the final submission of their article. What We Do Correct spelling, grammatical, and punctuation errors in your paper, abstract and author bios Revise for clarity, readability, logic, awkward word choice, and phrasing Check for typos and formatting inconsistencies Confirm proper use of The Chicago Manual of Style The Editing Process us at to express your interest in having your article edited. The charge for the editorial service charge is USD $0.05 per word. Within business days of your confirmed payment, you will receive an edited copy of your edited article via . We can also upload the edited copy for you, and any pending submission deadlines will be altered to accommodate your editing timeline. Contact us at to request a quote or for further information about our services. Citation Services Common Ground requires the use of the sixteenth edition of the Chicago Manual of Style for all submitted journal articles. We are pleased to offer a conversion service for authors who used a different scholarly referencing system. For a modest fee, we will convert your citations to follow the Chicago Manual of Style guidelines. What We Do Change references internal citations and end-of-article references to confirm proper use of the sixteenth edition of The Chicago Manual of Style, using either the author-date or notes and bibliography format of The Chicago Manual of Style. Check for typos and formatting inconsistencies within the citations. The Conversion Process us at to express your interest in having your references converted. For articles under 5,499 words (excluding titles, subtitles, and the abstract), the charge for reference conversion is $50. If your article is more than 5,000 words, please contact us for a quote. Within business days of your confirmed payment, you will receive a copy of your article with the revised references. We can also upload the revised copy for you, and any pending submission deadlines will be altered to accommodate the conversion timeline. Contact us at to request a quote or for further information about our services. Translation Services Common Ground is pleased to offer translation services for authors who would like to have their work translated into or from Spanish or Portuguese. Papers that have undergone peer review and been accepted for publication by one of Common Ground s journals are eligible for this translation service. Papers can be translated from Spanish or Portuguese into English and published in one of Common Ground's English-language journals. Or they may be translated from English into either Spanish or Portuguese and be published in one of Common Ground's Spanish and Portuguese-language academic journals. In this way we offer authors the possibility of reaching a much wider audience beyond their native language, affirming Common Ground's commitment towards full internationality, multiculturalism, and multilingualism. All translations are done by certified professional translators with several years of experience, who are highly educated, and have excellent writing skills. The Process Contact to express your interest in having your article translated. Our editorial team will review your article and provide you with a quote based on the paper s word count. Once you accept the quote, a translator will be assigned to your article. Within business days of your confirmed payment, you will receive a draft of your translated article. You will have a chance to communicate with the translator via the draft using Word s track changes function. Based on that communication, the translator will supply you with a final copy of your translated article.

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